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When I left Microsoft a couple of years back I also decided to move house on the internet. I started looselytyped.net and made it my new location on the tubez (aka the internet). I didn’t technical “move” house I guess as you can still find my old blog.

In fact that is the problem!

If you search for “Chris Johnson SharePoint” my new site is on the first page of Bing, but not at the top & it’s the 2nd result on Google. However, my old blog is in the #1 spot in both search engines. Grrrr.

I didn’t want to delete my old blog, that seems like overkill and old posts still get a lot of traffic. There are 3 or 4 old posts that are knocking past 150,000 views which must mean someone finds them helpful. But given I have moved house I want people to find me at my new location. This issue has been confirmed by a couple of others who tried to find me and didn’t have good success. Classic SEO problem some would say.

Unfortunately, I cant seem to “relocate” my old content to my new blog & put in a good redirection process that would be search engine friendly. My old blog is hosted with Microsoft and there are limited controls as far as I can tell. So I think leaving it in place is my only option.

I have been making a concerted effort to try and get my new location indexed and ranking higher so people can find me. It has been working slowly.

It’s a very nifty tool. You sign up (free trial) and then add a wee bit of JavaScript to your page and you are all set.

What does HitTail do?

In a nutshell HitTail shows you what keywords (from your existing organic search traffic) you should target when writing content for your site that will increase your ranking.

Now this seems a bit counter intuitive at first, at least it did to me. Why would I write more content about things people are already coming to my site for that they found from a search?

Well, the suggestions it makes are based on the fact that people are finding your site but that you could be doing a much better job of ranking higher for those terms. So it helps guide you on what to write about that will bump you up the ranking.

So I am trying it out. I am reviewing the suggestions it makes and matching that up with topics I a) want to write about, b) have something useful to say about, and c) that I know people will find interesting.

At this stage it’s a trial to see how useful I find the suggestions, but I thought it was a handy tool to help with my internet home relocation.

If any of my readers are SEO experts I would love any other suggestions you have around my predicament. Suggestions welcome! Get in touch on Twitter @LoungeFlyZ

(the list above is not exhaustive and are really the ones I noticed and felt were interesting)

What is of real note is what is missing from SharePoint Online all together. This isn’t news to anyone who has been playing around with the preview … but for a lot of people I speak to these are not well known.

The biggest thing (IMHO) missing are around WCM features. Things like Content By Search Web Part, Catalogs, Topic Pages, Faceted navigation and Image Renditions are all pretty critical new features in SharePoint 2013 that are not currently available online. (they might be turned on later on at some point no doubt). This is a bit of a disappointment for those looking to build out search driven web sites.

For on SharePoint 2013 on premises the biggest “ouch” worth mentioning in my view is again WCM.

Pretty much all the new search driven WCM features are only included in SharePoint 2013 Enterprise. WCM Catalog, Facted Navigation, Image Renditions, Multiple Domains, Topic Pages, Content by Search etc…

Another odd thing I noticed was that Site Definitions were marked as not being included in Standard. This is weird and I suspect is wrong … but I have not checked it for myself yet.

Side Note: External Lists anomaly. For those with a keen eye might have seen that External Lists are included in the Foundation edition. Where as a lot of the other BCS related features are not. Reason: This is because of where the plumbing for External Lists sits. When we implemented this (I was the program manager who owned the external lists feature for 2010) we changed the SPList object so that you could access data in an External List the with the same SPList object model calls as you would with a regular list. Because this is a fairly deeply rooted object in the OM it’s part of the Foundation edition … and therefore in the 2010 release of SharePoint a lot of the BCS engine and core plumbing was moved to SharePoint Foundation from SharePoint Server to enable this SPList OM over external lists scenario. Bit of background for those still reading 🙂

-CJ.

PS: the fact that MS have published this means General Avalability and announcements around SharePoint Online upgrades should be coming soon … hopefully

Just pre-ordered a new Surface and really looking forward to getting it in a week or so.

I am really trying to stay open minded about this device. As you may know I am an MS kool-aid drinker for WAY back … but I have spent plenty of time with other devices too. I used to have an iPhone 3G, 3GS and a 4. I have an iPad (v1) currently that is my couch surfing device of choice.

A lot of people are asking my why get the RT version (ARM) over the Pro (x86) in 3 months time.

I want to replace my iPad. I am not looking for a laptop replacement right now. That is why I don’t care about running existing Windows desktop apps etc…

On top of that here are a few things why I think I will like the Surface better than my iPad:

Physical keyboard built into the screen cover. I’m only one flip away from productively typing a blog post like this vs. feeling like a nonce trying to type it on the crappy on screen keyboard.

As you probably have seen, yesterday saw the public unveiling of the new Office 2013 and SharePoint 2013 products and online services. The SharePointsphere has gone nuts and everyone is blogging and tweeting as they find stuff out about the products. Very exciting stuff! Some people like Andrew Connell are doing a fine job of articulating some of the new stuff for developers and designers like the new App model and the new WCM capabilities. There really is so much new stuff for us developers out there that I think it will take a good few months for it all to really sink in.

There is one part of all this that I am personally pretty excited about. You may jump to the conclusion that its Apps … it’s not … you might think it’s the Marketplace … it’s not …

What am I excited about?

Plumbing.

That’s right … I’m excited about plumbing … why? Well …

To enable these new capabilities like Apps and the Marketplace there has been A LOT of work done in the platform that makes up SharePoint. Features like OAuth for integrating with APIs, new Client Side Object Model capabilities & Remote Event receivers. Plus loads more.

These things all culminate in features like Apps … but also play a significant part on their own. These are the platform building blocks that we as developers need to unlock a whole new slew of scenarios.

Take for example this simple scenario:Programmatically uploading files from on prem to Office 365.

You might want to do this for a multitude of reasons. Possibly as part of a workflow that runs on prem that pushes documents out to partner sites you host in Office 365 for example.

With the addition of OAuth for in Office 365 you will be able to simply deploy an App to the 365 site that gives your code running on prem or in Azure the ability to seamlessly “log in” and use APIs like the Client Side Object Model without all the auth “goo” (see how politely I said that) you need today.

Or take for example the opposite scenario:Programmatically pulling files down from Office 365 when they are uploaded

Today when someone/something uploads a file into Office 365 you don’t currently have a way to catch that “event” and push the document out externally to another system. You can have event receivers, but code in the Sandbox cant talk to anything external. So what do people do today? They “poll”. They have some code that sits and spins every minute or so looking for new documents … then they “pull” it when one arrives. This is not a great solution for a variety of reasons, but its pretty much all they can do. In 2013 you have the ability to have Remote Event recievers where SharePoint will call your remote end point when an event fires so you can respond. No more polling required 🙂

Or take the scenario I demoed in the keynote at SharePoint Conference 2011:Pushing content into SharePoint Online from an Azure based web application.

In that scenario we had the NetHope voting application we had developed and hosted in Azure pushing vote data into NetHope’s Office 365 based intranet. We needed to use Headless Auth to do that.

The list goes on and on and on…

Just like how OAuth opens up authentication scenarios the Client Side Object Model (CSOM) and REST APIs open up programmatically callable functionality remotely.

In SP 2010 the CSOM only really covered Foundation data APIs for getting at things like List Data in sites. In 2013 that has been widely expanded to things like Search, Profiles & Taxonomy (personal favorite of mine). This makes working with SP remotely so much easier than having to cobble together calls using a combination of CSOM, Web Services, FPRPC & REST. So so much easier. If you are building code that isnt .Net or JS then you can call the Client.svc service with REST/OData to call the endpoints manually.

Between OAuth, Remote Event Receivers and the expanded CSOM developers are unlocked to build a plethora of solutions that are either hard to do today … or impossible today.

That’s why I am personally excited about the plumbing.

Being able to build your solutions and monetize them through Apps and the Marketplace is extremely cool too … but I’ll save up another post for how I think people should be approaching how to decide what “style” off App to build (like Provider Hosted vs. SharePoint hosted vs. Auto Hosted). Lots to think about and consider before jumping in there.

I have a MacBook pro that I run exclusively with Windows 7. No boot camp, no OSX etc…

When I went to load Office 2013 today it all installed fine … but failed to load when I tried to open any apps.

E.g:

I figured out (I cant say how) that its got something to do with Offices new graphics hardware acceleration support.

If you are into fiddling with the registry you can disable this via the following key:

HKEY_CURRENT_USERSoftwareMicrosoftOffice15.0CommonGraphics

(PS: if it doesn’t exist then create it)

Then create a DWORD value in there called “DisableHardwareAcceleration” and set it to “1” e.g.

Then Office apps would startup correctly:

Like I said above it might be something to do with my graphics driver and the card in the laptop. Here is what I have loaded:

I hope this saves some frustration and pain for anyone else out there having this problem.

Update: @waldekm also tells me this has solved an issue he was having with Office in a Virtual Machine being sluggish or slow and sometimes crashing. Turning off hardware acceleration seems to have fixed this for him also.

Anyone who knows me will know that I am not much of an Apple fanboi. I used to own an iPhone 4, but switched to Windows Phone over a year ago and haven’t looked back. I also own a MacBook Pro that solely runs Windows 7.

However, today Apple announced OS X “Mountain Lion” and I am 100% totally blown away at what it represents.

Apple are doing something so very very right in the OS world. They are transitioning to delivering a traditional PC OS in a cloud world… and doing it well. Basically this boils down into two things that blow me away:

Smaller, shorter releases each year

Cloud features baked into the OS.

Moving to a yearly (min) release cycle with smaller set of features is critical for keeping pace with what is going on in the world. Being able to take advantage of new services etc…

Baking in the Cloud deeply into the OS e.g. saving/opening to/from iCloud via standard OS open/save dialogs is fantastic & means developers don’t need to do that work in their apps.

This all might seem very simple and obvious, but doing these two things in software as complex as an OS is no mean feat.

More importantly, getting a company the size of Apple to agree internally, agree on a strategy and push in a direction like this, is in my view, the real accomplishment here. This will pay dividends for them in the next few years.

I have high hopes for Microsoft’s forthcoming Windows 8 to make similar advances. They just have to.

With my recent change in job I felt it was about time to find a new home on the net. So welcome to looselytyped.net a spot for all my ramblings.

I hope to continue blogging mostly about SharePoint, being a kiwi abroad & what ever else takes my fancy.

My old blog will continue to live on here, and I am not planning to migrate posts etc…

What’s up with the weird bird?

@ProvokeZoo “animals” pick a mascot that they think best describes them. There are lions, tigers, snakes, elephants … you name it there is probably one. I picked the Kiwi which contrary to popular belief isn’t a fruit (take note, Kiwi Fruit are different). I felt it was a good choice being a New Zealand abroad. We print our animal on our business cards and so hopfully it will spark up some interesting discussions to. For example, did you know that they lay the largest egg in relation to their body size of any species of bird in the world?!?!

I hope I will post here more frequently than my old blog. Hopefully with a little more of my personal note/takes on things and hopefully something you will find interesting.

In the theme of out with the old and in with the new … here is my new view over Bellevue from Provoke’s new office location.